I had been invited to speak later this month at St. John’s Seminary in Los Angeles. I have now been informed that the event is being cancelled, due to complaints from unnamed critics who find me too controversial. Meanwhile, the always controversial Fr. James Martin will be speaking this month at the Los Angeles Religious Education Congress, on the theme “Hope on the Horizon: LGBTQ Catholic Update 2026.” It appears that, for some in Archbishop Gomez‘s archdiocese, Fr. Martin is welcome to speak about that topic to educators of Catholic youth, but I am not welcome to speak to seminarians about how to defend the Church’s teaching on the soul’s immortality.
Friday, February 13, 2026
Saturday, February 7, 2026
No, AI does not have human-level intelligence
Defining “intelligence”
Naturally, before we can establish that AI has genuine intelligence, we need to make clear what it would be for it to have intelligence, and how we could go about determining that it has it. The first is a metaphysical question, the second an epistemological question. Our authors make no serious attempt to answer either one.
Friday, January 30, 2026
Van Fraassen on microscopy
Scientific realists take the contrary view that the success of a theory does give us reason to believe in the theoretical entities it posits. Among other arguments, they sometimes appeal to the idea that entities that at one time were unobservable later became observable with the rise of new technologies, such as telescopes, electron microscopes, and ordinary microscopes. This shows, they argue, that the boundary between observable and unobservable entities is not sharp enough to justify skepticism about the latter.
Monday, January 19, 2026
Socratic politics: Lessons from the Gorgias
Prioritizing democracy
But what exactly is it for either to have “priority” to the other? What Rorty had in mind is this. The liberal democratic tradition has pushed religion ever further out of the public square. Theology is now widely regarded as a purely private interest whose claims have no bearing on the political order. But for centuries, liberalism took philosophy to retain political relevance. In particular, liberal theorists took their favored polity to require philosophical foundations – in Locke’s natural rights theory, Mill’s utilitarianism, or whatever.
Tuesday, January 13, 2026
Church history does not support Trump’s expansionism
Friday, January 9, 2026
Pope Leo XIV on politics and the death penalty
A marvelous
address by @Pontifex that condemns the pathologies of both the woke left and
the jingoist right. Against the left, he denounces “the so-called ‘right to
safe abortion,’” warns of “a subtle form of religious discrimination against
Christians” by which they are “restricted in their ability to proclaim the
truths of the Gospel for political or ideological reasons,” and decries “a new
Orwellian-style language…which, in an attempt to be increasingly inclusive,
ends up excluding those who do not conform to the ideologies that are fueling
it.” Against the right, he warns of “excessive nationalism," affirms
"the importance of international humanitarian law," and notes that “a
diplomacy that promotes dialogue and seeks consensus among all parties is being
replaced by a diplomacy based on force… peace is sought through weapons as a
condition for asserting one’s own dominion." And he decries the fact that
on every side of our political culture and social media, “language is becoming
more and more a weapon with which to deceive, or to strike and offend
opponents” rather than used “to express distinct and clear realities
unequivocally.”
(From Twitter/X)
Thursday, January 8, 2026
Review of Gorman
Tuesday, January 6, 2026
Interview on the Venezuela situation
Friday, January 2, 2026
On Searle at First Things
Thursday, January 1, 2026
Some basic principles of masculinity
From Twitter/X today, inspired by an excellent article by Justin Lee:
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Catholic natural law thinkers on nation versus race
Thursday, December 25, 2025
Merry Christmas
Merry Christmas to all my readers. I love you all (including the grinches out there). May God bless you and yours!
Sunday, December 21, 2025
Return of the missing links
J.P. Andrew interviews
Rob Koons and Daniel Bonevac about their two forthcoming books on
Aquinas’s Five Ways.
At The New Yorker, Rachel Aviv reveals
that neurologist Oliver Sacks made up many of the details of his
famous case studies.
Sohrab
Ahmari on
the late Norman Podhoretz, at UnHerd.
At Fusion, Oliver Traldi on John Searle’s
forgotten book The Campus War.
Jacob Savage on the lost generation that DEI created, at Compact.
Thursday, December 18, 2025
Lawful authority in just war doctrine
Wednesday, December 17, 2025
Kant’s claustrophobic metaphysics (Updated)
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
Would a U.S. war against Venezuela be just?
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
It's an open thread!
Thursday, November 27, 2025
Liberalism and the virtue of gratitude
Friday, November 21, 2025
Pope Leo on immigration enforcement
I think we have to look for ways of treating people humanely,
treating people with the dignity that they have. If people are in the United States illegally,
there are ways to treat that. There are
courts, there’s a system of justice. I
think there are a lot of problems in the system. No one has said that the United States should
have open borders. I think every country
has a right to determine who and how and when people enter. But when people are living good lives, and
many of them for ten, fifteen, twenty years, to treat them in a way that is
extremely disrespectful to say the least, and there has been some violence
unfortunately, I think that the Bishops have been very clear in what they said
and I think that I would just invite all people in the United States to listen
to them.
This is a refreshingly calm, reasonable, and nuanced approach. As I have shown in earlier articles (at Public Discourse and at UnHerd), the Church has traditionally affirmed both that wealthy nations have a general obligation to welcome immigrants to the extent they are able, but also that they are not obligated to let in all who seek to enter, that they may put conditions on entry that take account of the economic needs and cultural cohesion of the receiving nation, and that immigrants must obey the law.
Thursday, November 13, 2025
Searle contra deconstruction
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Remembering John Searle
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Friday, October 24, 2025
There are two sides to the Catholic immigration debate
Saturday, October 18, 2025
Vallicella on Immortal Souls
Friday, October 10, 2025
Fastiggi and Sonna on Catholicism and capital punishment (Updated)
I appreciate their civility, and Fastiggi’s call at the end of the interview for charity in dealing with those who disagree. But their attempt fails. Much of what Fastiggi has to say are reheated claims that I have already refuted in past exchanges with him, such as the two-part essay I wrote in response to his series on the death penalty at Where Peter Is. (You can find it here and here. The essay was reprinted as a single long article in Ultramontanism and Tradition, edited by Peter Kwasniewski.) Fastiggi simply repeats his assertions without acknowledging, much less answering, my rebuttals. He also makes some new claims, which are no more plausible than the older ones. Let’s take a look.
Monday, September 29, 2025
Against flag burning
Sunday, September 28, 2025
John Searle (1932-2025)
Daily Nous has reported that John Searle has died. Searle was one of the true greats of contemporary philosophy, having made huge and lasting contributions to several of its subdisciplines, but especially to philosophy of mind and philosophy of language. His work had an enormous influence on me in my undergrad and graduate student years. His books Minds, Brains, and Science, Intentionality: An Essay in the Philosophy of Mind, Speech Acts, and The Rediscovery of the Mind were especially formative. And his uncommonly lucid style was the main model for my own approach to philosophical writing. I had the pleasure of meeting and talking to him on several occasions, and Steven Postrel and I interviewed him for Reason magazine over twenty-five years ago.
Saturday, September 20, 2025
How not to limit free speech
Friday, September 12, 2025
Thucydides’ times and ours
When major and shocking events occur, there is, of course, a tendency for people to respond more emotionally than rationally, and to overinterpret their significance. But it seems to me that two general points can safely be made about the current situation.
Saturday, September 6, 2025
Is mandatory vaccination intrinsically wrong?
That is by no means to say that all mandatory vaccinations are defensible. As I have argued, the Covid shot should never have been mandatory. But it goes way too far to claim, as Ladapo does, that all mandatory vaccination as such is “immoral” and amounts to “slavery.” The truth lies in the middle ground position that while there is a moral presumption against a mandate, in some cases that presumption can be overridden and it can be licit for governments to require vaccination. Sweeping statements of either extreme kind are wrong, and we need to go case by case.
Friday, August 29, 2025
Maimonides on negative theology
Monday, August 18, 2025
Diabolical modernity
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
Hanson on observation
Wednesday, August 6, 2025
Newman on capital punishment
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Suffering for the truth (Updated)
Thursday, July 24, 2025
A postliberal middle ground on trade
Saturday, July 19, 2025
Heeding Anscombe on just war doctrine
Here is a summary of her position. The pacifist holds that all killing is immoral, even when necessary to protect citizens against criminal evildoers within a nation, or foreign adversaries without. This position is contrary to the basic precondition of any social order, which is the right to protect itself against attempts to destroy it. It also has no warrant in the orthodox Christian tradition. A less extreme but related error is the thesis that violence can never justly be initiated, but at most can only ever be justified in response to those who have initiated it. In fact, Anscombe argues, what matters is not who strikes the first blow, but who is in the right. For example, it was in her judgment right for the British to initiate violence in order to suppress chattel slavery.

















